numbers
-- Ignore the signs temporarily. -- Divide the numbers. -- The quotient is negative.
using Math
yes
When it tells you to divide by a certain decimal it really will return an answer bigger than the number you started with because it is like multiplication.
a bigger decimal
numbers
yes, of course you can. for example, take any number and divide it by a bigger number. e.g. 10/100 = 0.1
Suppose you have two decimal numbers, A and B. If A - B > 0 then A is the bigger decimal, if A - B < 0 then B is the bigger decimal and if A - B = 0, neither is bigger.
-- Ignore the signs temporarily. -- Divide the numbers. -- The quotient is negative.
using Math
Exactly the way you would divide them if they were whole numbers and not decimals. The only extra trick to learn is how to decide where to put the decimal point in the quotient.
Repeating decimal. * * * * * It depends on the numbers! For example, 0.6 < 0.66... < 0.67 By the first inequality the repeatiing decimal is bigger, by the second the terminating one is bigger.
yes
When it tells you to divide by a certain decimal it really will return an answer bigger than the number you started with because it is like multiplication.
In decimal numbers the whole number re on the left side of the decimal point. So the whole numbers are 2 and 1. 2 is always bigger than one
you divide it and follow the dot if you find the answer